10-07-2016, 05:33 PM
(10-07-2016, 05:04 PM)Duffy Wrote:(10-07-2016, 03:09 PM)Roger Hunter Wrote:(10-07-2016, 02:26 PM)Duffy Wrote:Not entirely, house still not sold.(10-07-2016, 02:11 PM)Roger Hunter Wrote:(10-07-2016, 11:52 AM)Duffy Wrote: Note .................. I finally figured it out, this location is the source of the posted images. I didn't take into account, lines of longitude curve at polar regions on a 2D map . Svalbard was coming into daylight at the time stated in image 27th Sept, and the sun/moon were on the same line of longitude during the time the dome structure developed in image 30th Sept.... Hope this doesn't give cause for another blushing smiley !
Duffy (11:52 ut 7th Oct)
Duffy are you taking the sun's latitude into account? It makes a huge difference in where the 90 degree radius circle falls.
Roger
I did Roger, I've been recording a continuous pattern for several days which suggests an anomaly alternating in daylight and semi-daylight. Combined with other data, I found my error and Svalbard seems to fit the picture ... Glad your back !
Duffy
Anyway, I was wondering if a program would help which would accept a time and create a map with the lines which shows all points 90 degrees from the sun and moon at that moment?
Roger
Ideally, a program which would accept a time ... compute longitude of sun and moon ... and compute their longitudes relative to a 1 hour motional transit eg; the sun transits 15 degrees of longitude an hour, a program needs to calculate it's central position ... and it's position 7' 30' ahead and 7' 30' prior to the input time. Same goes for the moon, which would be a little harder as it's motional transit varies with it's orbital distance. Such a program would save time and errors !
Duffy
I'll see what I can do. More later.
Roger